NAME
rc.subr
—
functions used by system shell
scripts
SYNOPSIS
.
/etc/rc.subrbackup_file
action file current backupcheckyesno
varcheck_pidfile
pidfile procname [interpreter]check_process
procname [interpreter]debug
messageerr
exitval messageforce_depend
nameinfo
messageload_kld
[-e
regex] [-m
module] fileload_rc_config
nameload_rc_config_var
name varmount_critical_filesystems
typerc_usage
command ...reverse_list
item ...run_rc_command
argumentrun_rc_script
file argumentwait_for_pids
[pid ...]warn
message
DESCRIPTION
Therc.subr
script contains commonly used shell script
functions and variable definitions which are used by various scripts such as
rc(8).
Scripts required by ports in /usr/local/etc/rc.d will
also eventually be rewritten to make use of it.
The rc.subr
functions were mostly imported
from NetBSD.
They are accessed by sourcing /etc/rc.subr into the current shell.
The following shell functions are available:
backup_file
action file current backup- Make a backup copy of file into
current. Save the previous version of
current as backup.
The action argument may be one of the following:
add
- file is now being backed up by or possibly re-entered into this backup mechanism. current is created.
update
- file has changed and needs to be backed up. If current exists, it is copied to backup and then file is copied to current.
remove
- file is no longer being tracked by this backup mechanism. current is moved to backup.
checkyesno
var- Return 0 if var is defined to
“
YES
”, “TRUE
”, “ON
”, or ‘1
’. Return 1 if var is defined to “NO
”, “FALSE
”, “OFF
”, or ‘0
’. Otherwise, warn that var is not set correctly. The values are case insensitive. Note: var should be a variable name, not its value;checkyesno
will expand the variable by itself. check_pidfile
pidfile procname [interpreter]- Parses the first word of the first line of pidfile
for a PID, and ensures that the process with that PID is running and its
first argument matches procname. Prints the matching
PID if successful, otherwise nothing. If interpreter
is provided, parse the first line of procname,
ensure that the line is of the form:
#! interpreter [...]
and use interpreter with its optional arguments and procname appended as the process string to search for.
check_process
procname [interpreter]- Prints the PIDs of any processes that are running with a first argument
that matches procname.
interpreter is handled as per
check_pidfile
. debug
message- Display a debugging message to stderr, log it to the
system log using
logger(1), and return to the caller. The error message consists of
the script name (from $0), followed by
“
: DEBUG:
”, and then message. This function is intended to be used by developers as an aid to debugging scripts. It can be turned on or off by the rc.conf(5) variable rc_debug. err
exitval message- Display an error message to stderr, log it to the
system log using
logger(1), and
exit
with an exit value of exitval. The error message consists of the script name (from $0), followed by “: ERROR:
”, and then message. force_depend
name- Output an advisory message and force the name service to start. The name argument is the basename(1) component of the path to the script, usually /etc/rc.d/name. If the script fails for any reason it will output a warning and return with a return value of 1. If it was successful it will return 0.
info
message- Display an informational message to stdout, and log
it to the system log using
logger(1). The message consists of the script name (from
$0), followed by “
: INFO:
”, and then message. The display of this informational output can be turned on or off by the rc.conf(5) variable rc_info. load_kld
[-e
regex] [-m
module] file- Load file as a kernel module unless it is already
loaded. For the purpose of checking the module status, either the exact
module name can be specified using
-m
, or an egrep(1) regular expression matching the module name can be supplied via-e
. By default, the module is assumed to have the same name as file, which is not always the case. load_rc_config
name- Source in the configuration files for name. First,
/etc/rc.conf is sourced if it has not yet been
read in. Then,
/etc/rc.conf.d/name is
sourced if it is an existing file. The latter may also contain other
variable assignments to override
run_rc_command
arguments defined by the calling script, to provide an easy mechanism for an administrator to override the behaviour of a given rc.d(8) script without requiring the editing of that script. load_rc_config_var
name var- Read the rc.conf(5) variable var for
name and set in the current shell, using
load_rc_config
in a sub-shell to prevent unwanted side effects from other variable assignments. mount_critical_filesystems
type- Go through a list of critical file systems, as found in the rc.conf(5) variable critical_filesystems_type, mounting each one that is not currently mounted.
rc_usage
command ...- Print a usage message for $0, with
commands being the list of valid arguments prefixed
by
“[
fast
|force
|one
|quiet
]”. reverse_list
item ...- Print the list of items in reverse order.
run_rc_command
argument- Run the argument method for the current
rc.d(8) script, based on the settings of various shell variables.
run_rc_command
is extremely flexible, and allows fully functional rc.d(8) scripts to be implemented in a small amount of shell code.argument is searched for in the list of supported commands, which may be one of:
start
- Start the service. This should check that the service is to be started as specified by rc.conf(5). Also checks if the service is already running and refuses to start if it is. This latter check is not performed by standard FreeBSD scripts if the system is starting directly to multi-user mode, to speed up the boot process.
stop
- If the service is to be started as specified by rc.conf(5), stop the service. This should check that the service is running and complain if it is not.
restart
- Perform a
stop
then astart
. Defaults to displaying the process ID of the program (if running). enabled
- Return 0 if the service is enabled and 1 if it is not. This command does not print anything.
rcvar
- Display which rc.conf(5) variables are used to control the startup of the service (if any).
If pidfile or procname is set, also support:
Other supported commands are listed in the optional variable extra_commands.
argument may have one of the following prefixes which alters its operation:
fast
- Skip the check for an existing running process, and sets
rc_fast=
YES
. force
- Skip the checks for rcvar being set to
“
YES
”, and sets rc_force=YES
. This ignores argument_precmd returning non-zero, and ignores any of the required_* tests failing, and always returns a zero exit status. one
- Skip the checks for rcvar being set to
“
YES
”, but performs all the other prerequisite tests. quiet
- Inhibits some verbose diagnostics. Currently, this includes messages
"Starting ${name}" (as checked by
check_startmsgs
insiderc.subr
) and errors about usage of services that are not enabled in rc.conf(5). This prefix also sets rc_quiet=YES
. Please, note: rc_quiet is not intended to completely mask all debug and warning messages, but only certain small classes of them.
run_rc_command
uses the following shell variables to control its behaviour. Unless otherwise stated, these are optional.- name
- The name of this script. This is not optional.
- rcvar
- The value of rcvar is checked with
checkyesno
to determine if this method should be run. - command
- Full path to the command. Not required if argument_cmd is defined for each supported keyword. Can be overridden by ${name}_program.
- command_args
- Optional arguments and/or shell directives for command.
- command_interpreter
- command is started with:
#! command_interpreter [...]
which results in its ps(1) command being:
command_interpreter [...] command
so use that string to find the PID(s) of the running command rather than command.
- extra_commands
- Extra commands/keywords/arguments supported.
- pidfile
- Path to PID file. Used to determine the PID(s) of the running command.
If pidfile is set, use:
check_pidfile $pidfile $procname
to find the PID. Otherwise, if command is set, use:
check_process $procname
to find the PID.
- procname
- Process name to check for. Defaults to the value of command.
- required_dirs
- Check for the existence of the listed directories before running the
start
method. - required_files
- Check for the readability of the listed files before running the
start
method. - required_modules
- Ensure that the listed kernel modules are loaded before running the
start
method. This is done after invoking the commands from start_precmd so that the missing modules are not loaded in vain if the preliminary commands indicate a error condition. A word in the list can have an optional “:
modname” or “~
pattern” suffix. The modname or pattern parameter is passed toload_kld
through a-m
or-e
option, respectively. See the description ofload_kld
in this document for details. - required_vars
- Perform
checkyesno
on each of the list variables before running thestart
method. - ${name}_chdir
- Directory to
cd
to before running command, if ${name}_chroot is not provided. - ${name}_chroot
- Directory to chroot(8) to before running command. Only supported after /usr is mounted.
- ${name}_env
- A list of environment variables to run command with. This will be passed as arguments to the env(1) utility.
- ${name}_env_file
- A file to source for environmental variables to run command with. Note that all the variables which are being assigned in this file are going to be exported into the environment of command.
- ${name}_fib
- FIB Routing Table number to run command with. See setfib(1) for more details.
- ${name}_flags
- Arguments to call command with. This is usually
set in
rc.conf(5), and not in the
rc.d(8) script. The environment variable
‘
flags
’ can be used to override this. - ${name}_nice
- nice(1) level to run command as. Only supported after /usr is mounted.
- ${name}_limits
- Resource limits to apply to command. This will be passed as arguments to the limits(1) utility. By default, the resource limits are based on the login class defined in ${name}_login_class.
- ${name}_login_class
- Login class to use with ${name}_limits. Defaults
to “
daemon
”. - ${name}_oomprotect
- protect(1) command from being
killed when swap space is exhausted. If
“
YES
” is used, no child processes are protected. If “ALL
”, protect all child processes. - ${name}_program
- Full path to the command. Overrides command if both are set, but has no effect if command is unset. As a rule, command should be set in the script while ${name}_program should be set in rc.conf(5).
- ${name}_user
- User to run command as, using chroot(8) if ${name}_chroot is set, otherwise uses su(1). Only supported after /usr is mounted.
- ${name}_group
- Group to run the chrooted command as.
- ${name}_groups
- Comma separated list of supplementary groups to run the chrooted command with.
- ${name}_prepend
- Commands to be prepended to command. This is a generic version of ${name}_env, ${name}_fib, or ${name}_nice.
- argument_cmd
- Shell commands which override the default method for argument.
- argument_precmd
- Shell commands to run just before running argument_cmd or the default method for argument. If this returns a non-zero exit code, the main method is not performed. If the default method is being executed, this check is performed after the required_* checks and process (non-)existence checks.
- argument_postcmd
- Shell commands to run if running argument_cmd or the default method for argument returned a zero exit code.
- sig_stop
- Signal to send the processes to stop in the default
stop
method. Defaults toSIGTERM
. - sig_reload
- Signal to send the processes to reload in the default
reload
method. Defaults toSIGHUP
.
For a given method argument, if argument_cmd is not defined, then a default method is provided by
run_rc_command
:- Argument
- Default method
start
- If command is not running and
checkyesno
rcvar succeeds, start command. stop
- Determine the PIDs of command with
check_pidfile
orcheck_process
(as appropriate),kill
sig_stop those PIDs, and runwait_for_pids
on those PIDs. reload
- Similar to
stop
, except that it uses sig_reload instead, and does not runwait_for_pids
. Another difference fromstop
is thatreload
is not provided by default. It can be enabled via extra_commands if appropriate:extra_commands=reload
restart
- Runs the
stop
method, then thestart
method. status
- Show the PID of command, or some other script specific status operation.
poll
- Wait for command to exit.
rcvar
- Display which
rc.conf(5) variable is used (if any). This method
always works, even if the appropriate
rc.conf(5) variable is set to
“
NO
”.
The following variables are available to the methods (such as argument_cmd) as well as after
run_rc_command
has completed:- rc_arg
- Argument provided to
run_rc_command
, after fast and force processing has been performed. - rc_flags
- Flags to start the default command with. Defaults to
${name}_flags, unless overridden by the
environment variable ‘
flags
’. This variable may be changed by the argument_precmd method. - rc_pid
- PID of command (if appropriate).
- rc_fast
- Not empty if “
fast
” prefix was used. - rc_force
- Not empty if “
force
” prefix was used.
run_rc_script
file argument- Start the script file with an argument of
argument, and handle the return value from the
script.
Various shell variables are unset before file is started:
name, command, command_args, command_interpreter, extra_commands, pidfile, rcvar, required_dirs, required_files, required_vars, argument_cmd, argument_precmd. argument_postcmd.The startup behaviour of file depends upon the following checks:
- If file ends in .sh, it is sourced into the current shell.
- If file appears to be a backup or scratch file (e.g., with a suffix of ~, #, .OLD, or .orig), ignore it.
- If file is not executable, ignore it.
- If the rc.conf(5) variable rc_fast_and_loose is empty, source file in a sub shell, otherwise source file into the current shell.
stop_boot
[always]- Prevent booting to multiuser mode. If the autoboot
variable is set to ‘
yes
’, orcheckyesno
always indicates a truth value, then aSIGTERM
signal is sent to the parent process, which is assumed to be rc(8). Otherwise, the shell exits with a non-zero status. wait_for_pids
[pid ...]- Wait until all of the provided pids do not exist any more, printing the list of outstanding pids every two seconds.
warn
message- Display a warning message to stderr and log it to
the system log using
logger(1). The warning message consists of the script name (from
$0), followed by “
: WARNING:
”, and then message.
FILES
- /etc/rc.subr
- The
rc.subr
file resides in /etc.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The rc.subr
script appeared in
NetBSD 1.3. The
rc.d(8) support functions appeared in NetBSD
1.5. The rc.subr
script first appeared in
FreeBSD 5.0.